Aug., 1932
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KINETICS OF GAS EXPLOSIONS
which was to be extracted out with one of the solvents mentioned above. Since it was necessary to extract with very large amounts of solvent, many times it was imperative that the acid be very insoluble in the solvent in order that the solution remain acid until the end of the extraction process. Acknowledgment.-The author acknowledges his indebtedness to Dr. Herbert M. Evans and to Dr. R. E. Cornish of this Department for their valuable assistance and advice. Summary Distribution ratios of six fatty acids and four inorganic acids were measured between water and several solvents which are not miscible with water. A short discussion of the results is given. BERKELEY,CALIFORNIA
[CONTRIBUTION FROM
THE
PITTSBURGH EXPERIMENT STATION, U.
s.BUREAUOF MINES]
THE KINETICS OF GAS EXPLOSIONS. 111. THE INFLUENCE OF HYDROGEN ON THE THERMAL DECOMPOSITION OF OZONE SENSITIZED BY BROMINE VAPOR, AND THE DETERMINATION OF THE EXPLOSION TEMPERATURE' BY
w.FEITKNECHT~ AND BERNARD LEWIS3
RECEIVED APRIL2.5,1932
PUBLISHED AUGUST5, 1932
In a previous paper4 it was shown that inert gases exert a small influence on the rate of decomposition of ozone in the presence of bromine as long as the ozone pressure is low. -4t higher pressures the rate is slowed down and the explosion pressure limit of ozone is increased considerably. The efficiency of inert gases in increasing the explosion limit decreases with increasing molecular weight. The influence of hydrogen was not included in the previous investigations. It seemed of special interest, as hydrogen increases considerably the photochemical rate of decomposition of ozone with the simultaneous formation of water.6 Belton, Griffith and McKeown6 found a similar inffuence of hydrogen on the thermal decomposition of ozone, whereas Schumacher' states that hydrogen has only a slight effect on the thermal Published by permission of the Director, U. S. Bureau of Mines. (Not subject to copyright } a Formerly Foreign Exchange Fellow, University of Pittsburgh. Physical Chemist, U. S. Bureau of Mines, Pittsburgh Experiment Station, Pittsburgh, Pa. Part I, THISJOURNAL, 53,2910 (1931). Part 11, &id., 54, 1784 (1932). Weigert and Bohm, Z. physik. Chem., 90, 189 (1915); Griffith and Shutt, J . Chem. Soc., 123,2752 (1923). Belton, Griffith and McKeown, ibid., 126,3153 (1926). 'I Schumacher, THIS JOURNAL, 52,2388 (1930).
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VOl. 54
decomposition. It has been found by one of us8 that ozone is indeed extremely stable in the presence of hydrogen a t room temperatures. However, a t higher temperatures (80 to go'), the influence of hydrogen is so great that under certain conditions the ozone may be made to explode violently. The thermal decomposition of ozone sensitized by bromine vapor, at temperatures (< 15') a t which the solid oxide of bromine is formed, is unaffected by h y d r ~ g e n . ~ The present experiments with ozone-bromine mixtures and hydrogen were carried out in the same way as those with similar mixtures and inert gases described previously. The experimental temperature employed was 25'. The rate of the non-explosive reaction was of the same order as that for corresponding mixtures with other inert gases, and the reaction went to about 70% completion in ten minutes. This strongly indicated that no water was formed, for water in very small amounts (